Peter the Great: Champion Trotting Horse
					
						
							
								
								WMU Archives Photograph WMU - U - 10499 
						 
						
							
							“If 
							Kalamazoo had never held a horse race, had there 
							never been a trotting track here, the name of 
							Kalamazoo would still never be forgotten by horsemen. 
							That is due to three men, and one horse. The men 
							were Samuel A. Browne, Daniel D. Streeter and Peter 
							V. Johnston; the horse was Peter the Great.” These 
							three men used their shrewd business sense, their 
							intimate knowledge of horses, and a good bit of luck 
							to breed and train a champion trotter like the world 
							had never seen.Background
							All 
							standardbred horses, the trotters and pacers of 
							today, trace their ancestry back to a single horse 
							named Messenger who came to America in 1808. 
							Compared to the ancient history of horse racing in 
							general, the standardbred is relatively young. 
							During the second half of the nineteenth century, 
							horse racing became increasingly popular in 
							Kalamazoo, and wealthy businessmen took to breeding 
							horses for recreation and as a sign of status. One 
							of these was the prominent lumberman Samuel A. 
							Browne. While most of his operations (of which U. S. 
							Senator Francis Stockbridge was an important 
							partner) took place in the Muskegon area, he lived 
							and raised horses in Kalamazoo. In 1891 Browne sold 
							a mare named Santos to prominent Kalamazoan Daniel 
							D. Streeter for one thousand dollars.
 
					 
					
						
							
								Peter V. Johnston 
							
								
								Kalamazoo News Advertiser, 2 February 2023
						 
						
							
							Early Beginnings of Peter the Great
							
							Streeter bred horses at his Oaklands home on what is 
							now the campus of Western Michigan University. In 
							the winter of 1894, Streeter sent Santos to Battle 
							Creek to breed with a stallion called Pilot Medium. 
							Her colt was born at the Oaklands in 1895 and named 
							Peter the Great.  Peter V. Johnston, a world famous 
							horse driver and trainer who had retired to 
							Kalamazoo, almost passed up the opportunity to train 
							and drive Streeter’s new colt, saying that he was 
							retired and was “going on a long fishing trip.” 
							After much persuasion by Streeter, Johnston gave in 
							and agreed to train Peter. Johnston was an 
							experienced trainer and put all his knowledge to 
							work in training Peter to be a champion.
							Racing Success
							In 
							1897 when Peter the Great was two years old, 
							Streeter and Johnston took him to Lexington to race 
							in the Kentucky Futurity, the greatest trotting race 
							of the day. Almost no one had heard of the dark red 
							horse from Kalamazoo, but when he finished a close 
							second to race favorite Janie T., the name of Peter 
							the Great was on every tongue. The following year 
							Peter returned as a three year old and dominated at 
							the Futurity. He won all three of his heats and set 
							a new track record of 2:12:1/2. At the end of 1898, 
							Streeter sold his prize horse to a Boston sportsman 
							named J. Malcolm Forbes for $20,000. In 1899 Forbes 
							raced Peter at the Empire City Track in New York 
							where he recorded his lifetime best time of 2:07:1/4 
							and finished in first place to claim a $5,000 purse. 
							Soon afterwards he came up lame in one leg. Peter’s 
							racing career had been brief but memorable, but his 
							lasting contribution to the trotting world was in 
							the incredible number of quality colts that he sired.
 
					 
					
						
							
								
								Peter the Great 
								winning a race, 2nd heat, 1899, Lexington, KY.
							
								
								Image originally 
								published Dec. 9, 1953 Harness Horse, 
								digitized by Don Daniels, and provided to KPL by 
								Terry Motycka and the U. S. Trotting Assoc.
						 
						
							
							Peter’s Remaining Years
							Over 
							the rest of his life, Peter the Great lived in 
							Boston, Lexington, and Indianapolis and was bred by 
							several different owners. By the time Peter died in 
							1923 at the age of 28, he had sired 549 standard 
							performers. His blood still flows in the veins of 
							the majority of champion trotting horses today.
							A Monument to Peter the Great
							In 
							1931 Kalamazoo area businessman
							Charles B. Hays and relatives of Daniel Streeter 
							provided funds to erect a monument to commemorate 
							the birthplace of Kalamazoo’s most famous horse. The 
							plaque, affixed to a boulder, reads: “On this farm 
							was born the trotting stallion and sire Peter the 
							Great 2:07¼.  Bred by D. D. Streeter. Trained and 
							driven in Kentucky Futurities by Peter V. Johnston.” 
							The marker was originally placed near the barn where 
							Peter was born but has been moved several times as 
							the campus has grown. It presently sits at the west 
							end of Western Michigan University's Administration 
							Building on Michigan Avenue.
 
					 
					
						
							
								
								Peter the Great historic marker, Western 
								Michigan University, West Campus.
							
								
								Photographed by Alex Forist
						 
						
							
					 
					
					Written by Alex 
					Forist, Kalamazoo Public Library Staff, April 2005. Updated 
					28 June 2007.
					
						
						Sources
						
						
							- 
							Hager, Dave 
 
							- 
							Kalamazoo Gazette, 1 June 1975, page D1
 
						
						
						Local History Room Subject File: Peter the Great
						"Horses and Horse Racing in Kalamazoo"
						
							- 
							Miller, Leon W. 
 
							- 
							Michigan History, Volume 35, No. 4, December 
							1951, pages 385-405